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COURSES - FALL 2004

GRADUATE COURSES

All graduate courses meet in Classics East Pyne 161, Seminar Room unless otherwise noted.

CLA502 - Survey of Selected Greek Literature: Survey of Greek Literature
The course concentrates on reading selected texts within a particular genre or genres or period. Research paper not required for credit. Offered alternatively with 503.
Professor Andrew Ford
Seminar: 1:30-4:20pm - T                

CLA513/COM516 - Ancient Literary Criticism
Study of a selection of critical texts, such as the following: Plato, Republic and Phaedrus; Aristotle, Poetics and Rhetoric; "Longinus," On the Sublime; Cicero, De oratore, etc.; Horace, De arte poetica; and Quintilian, Institutio Oratoria.
Professor James Porter
Seminar: 1:30-4:20pm - W                 

CLA531 - Cicero
Selections from the orations, letters, rhetorical works or philosophical works of Cicero are read. The course may be organized around a period in Cicero's life, a literary genre, or Roman private or public life depending on the interests of the instructor and the students.
Professor Robert Kaster
Seminar: 9:00-11:50pm - F                 

CLA545 - Problems in Roman History: Economics of Empire
Larger themes, such as Roman imperialism, the decline of the republic, and the rise of the multicultural empire, are considered in rotation with the study of specific problems and ancillary disciplines.
Professor Brent Shaw
Seminar: 1:30-4:20pm - Th                 

CLA546-Problems in Roman History: Introduction to Roman Epigraphy
Larger themes, such as Roman imperialism, the decline of the republic, and the rise of the multicultural empire, are considered in rotation with the study of specific problems and ancillary disciplines..
Professor Harriet Flower
Seminar: 9:00-11:50am - T                 

CLA547/PAW - Problems in Ancient History: Priests and Power in the Ancient World
Study of a topic involving both ancient Greece and ancient Rome, such as imperialism or slavery, from a comparative perspective.
Professors Michael Flower & John Gager
Seminar: 9:00-11:50am - Th -                 Human 209

CLA552 - the Classical Tradition in the Middle Ages: John of Salisbury and the Classics
An examination of the interactions of medieval classical scholarship and Latin literature, with reference to an outstanding author or literary circle, such as Hildebert of Le Mans, John of Salisbury, or the 10th-century Ottonian court. Some attention is paid to methods of investigating the medieval transmission and reception of classical authors.
Professor Janet Martin
Seminar:  1:30-4:20pm - M

 

 

Updated Thursday, March 10, 2005, 12:15 p.m. by Donna